Looks Like Ifs Doing 100 mpg
When It's Standing Still I Long gone is the ime when the major apanese
motorcycle hanufacturers were attling it out in comat on the showroom oors
and racetracks 'ith 50cc and l00cc nd 125cc motorcyles.
The basic motor-|ycle went from
100 to 250 to 350 to 500 to 50ccs and with each increase there was a knaller
and smaller selection of small reel motorcycles.
Now. below 200cc. there is only one. The onda CBI25. It's been around since
the |me when all the factories had 125 street kes. And it hasn't changed
much over the pars, though this year it has bright red nders that go nicely
with the tasteful Kline of the little bike. There not being any competition
for the BI25. it manages to get along with the me I25cc sohc Single,
live-speed transotos by Steve Kimball mission and combination pressed steel
and tube frame. There's no electric starling or tachometer or turn signal
cancelcr or disc brakes. This is a very basic motorcycle.
Big holes not costing any more
to make than little holes, the only way Honda could sell the CB125 for less
money than Yamaha does the SR500 is to leave off some of the features and
cut costs wherever possible. And there just aren't that many parts on a
Single that can be left off. Particularly with a sohc Single.
Of course there are no
counter-rotating balancer shafts on the 125 such as those of the large Honda
Singles. Nor are they needed. On the engine is the most basic of 22mm slide
valve carburetors and an ordinary battery and points ignition. This is all
basic stuff, stuff that's worked for years and is easy to maintain. Valve
lash is set with a screw driver and wrench. For maximum performance you
shift when the speedometer needle reaches the shift mark.
Little motorcycles naturally get stigmatized. So do big motorcycles, but the
stigma isn't so offensive. Little motorcycles lend themselves to beginning
riders because they are light and less intimidating than bigger machines.
All the controls are within the power of smaller" people, so small folks
like the son who's not fully grown and the wife who can't reach the ground
on the dual purpose bike can feel at home on the CBI25.
Put in the right perspective,
however, the 125 becomes fun (if not exciting) to those used to much bigger
machines. When was the last lime you were engaged in a contest Of speed and
didn't have to worry about getiing a ticket? Heck, on the Honda 125 every
stoplight is a drag race and the competition is in Honda cars and Volkswagen
busses and Buick sedans. The CB125 will win those races, too. but mostly
because people in cars don't drive as fast as they can. Still, there's a
thrill in seeing traffic fade slowly in the rearview mirrors as the Honda is
thrashed to the shift points in every gear. At least in town the traffic
fades pleasantly back. Out on an open road the story is reversed as the
Honda has all it can do keeping up with the flow of cars doing 60.
Because the performance is so
modest, the 125 lends to be ridden flat out all the time. People who usually
refrain from such practices found themselves powershifting into second gear
to pop the front wheel in the air. Other benefits of the 125 size came when
traffic backed up and the 125 rider could slip between the lanes on even
narrow streets.
One place the 125 isn't fun is on a busy interstate. In areas with rain
grooves the grooves throw the little bike back and forth, the short
handlebars wiggling disconcertingly. While the bike can reach nearly 70 mph.
it can only hold 60 mph without the rider flat on the tank and without wind.
Hills or headwinds can slow the bike down to 50 where it is uncomfortable in
traffic. In California the 125 isn't even legal on freeways because the
engine is smaller than the minimum 175cc size required. {There is no life in
the slow lane in California because there's no slow lane.)
The brakes on the CB125 are
worth mentioning, but that's not something positive. It's a 10 horsepower
motorcycle with five horsepower brakes. One rider took the 125 to the bank
and came back wanting tc know what was wrong with the front brake He didn't
think it had one. At both ends ol the small Honda there are tiny drurr
brakes, each one with 13 sq. in. of brake area. The rear brake manages to do
its jot because there's lots of leverage for a strong fool and the rear end
of a motorcycle doesn't do much stopping anyway. Up front there's a shorter
lever for a hanc that's not as strong as a foot and the brake is the same
size so little happens when i rider grabs the lever.
Considering this is a beginner's
motor cycle, the brakes will only teach the ride: that he can't pull the
front brake too hard but it could also teach the rider that it's no worth
pulling it at all. Before the othei factories got out of the small street
bike market. Honda had a disc brake on th« front of the 125. Now that
there's n< competition, there's the tiniest of drums.
The clutch is also marginal. It
can't b< held in until the signal changes because i warms up and begins to
grab. When lh< engine is revved up before taking off th< clutch can object
with peculiar noises Even during gentle riding the clutch leve moves a long
way. slowly taking hold before it all-of-a-sudden grabs. Beginnin| riders
deserve better.
Starting the 125 is simple, but
not a: easy as other small motorcycles have been The lever is short and
needs more pressun than a small two-stroke needs to kick i over. Once moved,
the Honda starts withii a couple of kicks, hot or cold. When cold however,
the choke must remain on for i few minutes or the cycle will die. but when
ridding the bike the choke has to be turned olf so the engine will rev. Cold
running could certainly be improved. Once when he Honda was kicked over it
backfired and refused to start. The frustrated rider gave up and took an
easy-starting Yamaha 5R500 home for the night, discovering the next morning
that the backfire had blown the plastic top off the 125*s carburetor, taking
the slide with it.
The plastic carb top had simply
broken in two. Another excessively cheap part.
, Suspension? Yes. there is some. Again, t's what you'd put on if you
couldn't sell he bike for as much as you'd like. Travel is 1.5 in. front and
2.6 in. rear, with springs tiff enough to keep a normal size person rom
bottoming the shocks but still able to ibsorb the shock from big holes. Rear
pring preload is adjustable, the only ad-ustment on the suspension.
Considering he spindly forks and tiny shocks, the uspension works better
than it should.
Handling is a mailer of trust.
How much oes the rider trust the 18 in. Bridgestone n front and the 17 in.
Nitto in back? craping the pegs on the 125 would be a latter of bravery, not
skill. Honda makes a 25 roadracer. but this isn't it. The 47 in. heelbase
and 200 plus pounds of motor-ycle make for a flighty sort of motorcycle, ne
that will turn instantly at the slightest rovocation and ihe quickness
increases as >eed slowly builds.
The CB125 is economy
transportation. Ildid 78 mpg on the CM test loop, the best result since we
began doing repeatable miles-per-gallon tests. And the loop is a bit unfair
to small engines, as thev are working hard on the highway portions that
allow superbikes to cruise with throttles barely cracked. In intended
service, for example running errands, shorl hops to school and store, the
125 would be even belter. (A minority comment here, from those who recall
that the old 500 Twins, as in Triumph, used to return almost as man) miles
per gallon. A mild, slow-turning large engine can be as efficient as a
small, high-rewing engine.) But overall, the CBI25 is our mpg champ to date.
One reason it's so tough to build a good small motorcycle is the amount of
safety equipment required on a street bike. The reflectors and two brake
light switches and signal lights and the emission certification cost as much
on a small bike as on a large bike and the required equipment becomes a
greater part of the motorcycle's cost.
There's a curious blend of
features and lack of features on the 125. There's a helmet lock and tool box
hanging below the seat on the right side. A grab strap runs across the seat.
Two pods contain the speedometer/odometer in the lefthand pod and warning
lights for turn signals, high beam and neutral in the righthand pod. There
is no oil pressure warning light or sight gauge for checking oil level. No
trip meter. The 35 watt headlight only seems to work on well lighted
streets. It would be appropriate on a moped, perhaps. Yet there's a locking
cover over the gas tank filler that surely requires more parts and more cost
than a simple locking cap that would also be easier to use.
When Honda came up with the
revised XL 125 a couple of years ago. it would have seemed natural to stick
the improved 125cc engine in the CB at the same time. After all, the CDI,
six-speed transmission and better carburetor cost little extra and one
engine could have cut production costs. Instead. Honda changes the CB125 by
adding rectangular turn signals and redesigned clutch and brake levers and
hand lever dust covers and new fuel tank striping and sidecover emblems and
improved seat styling.
All those changes make for a more attractive motorcycle and Honda is betting
that the inexperienced rider who will buy the CB125 is more interested in
the better styling than he or she would have been in improved brakes and
clutch or better tires. Honda, as usual, is probably right.
Fortunately, there's also the XL
125 and the almost-identical but more powerful XL 185 that cost little more
than the CB125 and provide much greater performance. With a suggested retail
price of S928 the CB125 is the cheapest pure street motorcycle available.
It's also the best under-200cc street bike because it's the only under-200cc
street bike. S